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The Namibian
Independent newspaper in Namibia
Independent newspaper in Namibia
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | The Namibian |
| image | The Namibian logo.png |
| type | Daily newspaper |
| format | Broadsheet |
| founded | 30 August 1985 |
| owners | Free Press of Namibia |
| chief_editor | Tangeni Amupadhi |
| language | English, Oshiwambo |
| headquarters | Windhoek West, Windhoek |
| website |
The Namibian is the largest daily newspaper in Namibia.{{cite book |author-link=André du Pisani |editor-last=Lister |editor-first=Gwen |editor-link=Gwen Lister
History
The newspaper was established in 1985 by journalist Gwen Lister as a weekly newspaper reliant on support of donors, which aimed to promote Namibian independence from South Africa. Its first edition appeared on 30 August of that year with a print run of 10,000.{{cite book |editor-last=Lister |editor-first=Gwen |editor-link=Gwen Lister |editor-last=Lister |editor-first=Gwen |editor-link=Gwen Lister
On the 15th anniversary of its foundation, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan praised the newspaper: "The Namibian worked courageously in difficult and often dangerous conditions. Since then, it has contributed immeasurably to press freedom and nation-building in Namibia. Throughout, it has maintained its integrity and independent stance."
Relations to government
Prior to Namibian independence
The newspaper exposed human rights violations by South Africa's occupying forces and was thus perceived as overly critical and pro-SWAPO by the South African government. Even the name of the newspaper irritated the South African administration as they preferred the land to be called South West Africa, whereas Namibia was a notion closely related to the independence movement.
There were several incidents of violence against The Namibian offices, leased from anti-apartheid activist and architect Kerry McNamara, in the months after its foundation. Shooting at the building necessitated the installation of bullet-proof glass, and there were several firebombing and teargassing attacks.{{Cite news |author-link=Gwen Lister
After independence
The offices of the newspaper were again devastated by a phosphorus grenade attack shortly after Namibian independence in 1990 by a right-wing counterrevolutionary group whose plot to unseat SWAPO was covered by The Namibian. However, the critical approach of the newspaper was also disliked by the SWAPO government. Dirk Mudge, head of the South African-controlled government from 1978 to 1989 wrote at the occasion of the newspaper's 10th anniversary:{{Cite news |author-link=Dirk Mudge "During the past ten years [...] The Namibian [...] did not show particular understanding nor sympathy towards me personally and my political views. Cognisance must however, be taken of the fact that The Namibian is also prepared to take the present government and its leaders to task whenever necessary."
The unpopularity of the newspaper within government led to a boycott on 5 December 2000 which was overturned only on 30 August 2011, the newspaper's 26th anniversary. In the more than ten years in between, government offices were not allowed to advertise in the newspaper, and it was forbidden to buy copies of The Namibian with government funds.{{cite news
Characteristics
A noteworthy feature of The Namibian are the SMS pages called "What you're saying!". These pages dedicated to "short messages to the editor" allow citizens from all over Namibia to comment on and raise topics, since mobile phones are widespread and cheaper and easier than mail or internet. According to former editor Gwen Lister, The Namibian was the first newspaper to offer such an open forum for discussion via text message, since similar programmes at other media (e.g. in South Africa) only allowed comment on chosen articles.
The newspaper has offices in Windhoek, Swakopmund, Keetmanshoop, Rundu and Oshakati. The current editor of the newspaper is Tangeni Amupadhi. Until March 2011, the newspaper was headed by its founder Gwen Lister. Its circulation in 2010 was 40,000.
References
References
- Larsen, Martin Buch. (June 2007). "A research paper commissioned and facilitated by MISA Namibia". [[Media Institute of Southern Africa]].
- [http://community.namibian.com.na/webx?230@48.oSdIa1syiG4.0@.ee6c4c2] {{webarchive. link. (20 March 2007)
- Rothe, Andreas. (2011). "Media System and News Selection in Namibia". Lit Verlag Münster.
- Ngatjiheue, Charmaine. (18 January 2017). "Anti-apartheid architect dies". The Namibian.
- Laudatory submission for Hero of World Press Freedom Award: [http://www.freemedia.at/Heroes_IPIReport2.00/27Lister.htm Gwen Lister] {{Webarchive. link. (31 May 2011)
- [[African National Congress. ANC]] Report to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, chapter 4.3.5.7: [http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/misc/trc04.html Usage of poison against opponents] {{Webarchive. link. (27 June 2007)
- Toivo Ndjebela: Amupadhi to edit ''The Namibian'', in: [[New Era (Namibia)]], 2 March 2011
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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